
Congratulations, it is an eye opener to other states that are thinking of such schemes.
In Hyderabad, the government...
Thanks. You have raised a very pertinent issue. My family is a great lover of Makhana and we use it in different ways. Slowly...
Migrant workersSingapore is regarded as a haven for migrant workers. But a film festival, Migrant Voice, which began on September 11 showed it is not so.
“We want to give migrant workers a platform to speak and encourage creative discourse,” said president Shaun Teo.
Films such as Durai and Saro, a fictional story of a platonic relationship between an Indian worker and a domestic help from the Philippines, aims at humanising the faceless mass that many Singaporeans have come to see as “others”, said director-producer Prema Menon.
Jenny Chan, another filmmaker, recounted the story of a Bangladeshi worker, who told her, “Our families pawn land and jewellery to send us here. They have not seen the hard labour and suffering we undergo here.”
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